On 30/06/10 10:35, Leopold Palomo-Avellaneda wrote:
The configuration (I have follow only the debian/ubuntu steps) shows
that br0
has assigned an IP. I did the mistake to try to assign the same IP in the
guest network configuration, I understand that, and obviously it doesn't work
(duplicate IPs). So, to me, it would me more clear if the br0 interface has
no IP. In my case, I have two nics: eth0 the interface for the host and eth1
for the guest. The eth1 part in my network/interfaces is:
...
auto eth1
iface eth1 inet manual
auto br0
iface br0 inet manual
bridge_ports eth1
bridge_stp on
bridge_maxwait 0
bridge_fd 0
...
and then in the guest you configure the IP as you want. In the host, eth1 (or
whatever interface you bridge) has no IP, so it's not used, and the guest
uses completely.
The common configuration that the wiki is documenting is presumably the
case where the host has a single ethernet interface that is shared by
the host and the guests. In that configuration the bridge does have an
address, which is the address of the host machine.
Basically a bridge is like a virtual ethernet switch inside your
machine, where one port is connected to each device that is enslaved to
it and another port is connected to the kernel's IP stack - that port
appears as the brN interface and can have an IP address (for the host)
assigned to it.
Tom
--
Tom Hughes (tom(a)compton.nu)
http://compton.nu/